Boston Red Sox at Baltimore Orioles Wednesday, September 28, 2011 – 7:05 pm (
EDT) at
Oriole Park at Camden Yards in
Baltimore, Maryland The Red Sox were favored by pundits to win the American League pennant prior to the start of the season due to acquisitions of
Adrián González,
Carl Crawford and
Bobby Jenks. Despite a slow start, Boston darted to the top of the division during the summer months. Injuries plagued the team and they slowly lost first place to the Yankees, but were still in comfortable contention for the wild card. The month of September started an epic slump for the team where the team had allowed the Rays to get back into contention. However, Boston still controlled its own destiny going into their final series with the last place Orioles, but wound up having the season come down to the last game. The Red Sox had taken a lead for a good part of the game, but the Orioles mounted a comeback. The game was interrupted by a rain delay in the middle of the 7th with Boston ahead 3–2.
Dustin Pedroia’s solo home run in the fifth looked like the eventual game winner. During this rain delay,
Dan Shaughnessy proclaimed "I think the Rays are not going to win tonight. I think the one thing we have eliminated is that the Red Sox season is not going to end tonight. They live to play another day." when asked about the Rays' chances of overcoming their 7–0 deficit against the Yankees. This proclamation would instantly backfire on him, as mere seconds after he made this statement, the Rays walked in a run with the bases loaded to make the game 7-1, in what would end up being a six-run rally in the bottom of the eighth inning to cut their deficit to 7-6. By the time the game had resumed almost an hour and a half later, the Rays had tied the game at 7 on a two out home run in the bottom of the 9th inning and were in the top of the 10th inning. The Orioles still trailed by a run going into the bottom of the 9th. When leading after eight innings, the Red Sox were 77–0 in 2011. Facing closer
Jonathan Papelbon,
Chris Davis and
Nolan Reimold hit back-to-back doubles with two outs, which tied the game. The next batter,
Robert Andino, hit a line drive to left field which Carl Crawford was unable to catch, allowing Reimold to score and the Orioles walked off with the win. After the Orioles won, Andino, who had been a Red Sox killer of late, said, "End of season like this, to make Boston go home sad, crying, I'll take it all day."
New York Yankees at Tampa Bay Rays Wednesday, September 28, 2011 – 7:10 pm (
EDT) at
Tropicana Field in
St. Petersburg, Florida The Yankees had already won the
American League East several days prior to this contest. The Rays had been in third place behind both the
Yankees and the Red Sox for much of the season. However, Boston had slowly started to lose many games in September due to poor starting and relief pitching, disappointing hitting from newly acquired free agent
Carl Crawford throughout the year, and injuries to key players like
Kevin Youkilis. The Rays, who had won the division in 2010, had lost many of their players to free agency, including Carl Crawford. Despite the losses, the Rays had crawled back into contention and faced the Yankees in the final series of the year. Yankees manager
Joe Girardi indicated that he would approach the final games so that the team's pitching staff would be set up for the
2011 ALDS against the
Detroit Tigers. Suspicions rose to whether or not the Yankees would compete intensely due to them wanting to rest their aging players for the playoffs and to keep the Red Sox out, their
fierce rivals whom they had a lopsided losing record to that season. Girardi indicated that many of his post-season pitchers would not be pitching that game. The Yankees, however, started the game strong by taking a 5–0 lead by the 2nd inning, which was punctuated by a grand slam by first baseman
Mark Texiera. Their lead grew to 7–0, which they held as the game entered the bottom of the 8th inning. In the 8th inning, the Rays scored six runs, capped off by a three-run home run by
Evan Longoria. In the bottom of the 9th inning, down to his final strike, struggling Rays first baseman
Dan Johnson hit a solo home run near the right field foul pole to tie the game. Already depleted from wanting to get pitchers who were not going to be on the postseason roster in, the Yankees went into extra innings with struggling pitchers. During Tampa Bay's half of the 12th inning, Evan Longoria hit his second home run of the game, a walk-off home run that cleared a short wall near the left field foul pole to win the game for the Rays just minutes after the Orioles' victory over the Red Sox. The win clinched the American League Wild Card for the Rays. Seat No. 10 in the first row behind the right-field foul pole has been painted white in honor of Dan Johnson's, game-tying, ninth-inning, pinch-hit blast during Game 162. They have also renamed the section beyond the left field foul pole "162 Landing" in honor of Longoria's game winning, 12th-inning home run. ==National League Wild Card race==